Waterloo Region Record

Woman says RCMP doctor ‘violated’ her

- ALISON AULD

— She was young and dreamed of wearing the RCMP’s signature red uniform, like the Mounties who patrolled her rural Nova Scotia community.

But for the woman, now in her 50s and declining to use her name, she says that dream turned sour from the start when she went to a medical office in Halifax in the late ’80s for a required physical exam as part of her applicatio­n process.

She says the doctor — an RCMP employee — had her undress and put on only a gown that was open at the back, and asked her to bend over and touch her toes while he stood behind her. Alone in the room with him, she says he told her to lay down on the examinatio­n table and he inserted his fingers into her vagina. She alleges he then put his fingers into her rectum after asking her to lay on her side.

“I didn’t know any better then and I thought this was what the RCMP wanted him to do, but he violated me,” she said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

“I wasn’t going to complain because it was the last thing I had to do before getting into the force and I didn’t want to rock the boat.”

The woman, who was accepted into the force but is now retired, is one of more than 60 men and women to file complaints with Halifax Regional Police over allegation­s the doctor sexually assaulted them at the RCMP health services office.

Halifax police Const. Carol McIsaac said the number of complaints is “very fluid” and continues to climb, with investigat­ors still in the informatio­n-gathering phase.

Toronto police are also probing sexual assault allegation­s against a second retired RCMP doctor who used to practise in the Mounties’ Ontario division. As of earlier this week, they had logged more than 20 complaints against him.

Reached at his home Wednesday, the Halifax doctor declined to comment. He has not been named by police and has not been charged with any offences. He has said previously that he was working as a doctor for the RCMP at the time and handled some administra­tive tasks as well.

RCMP spokesman Sgt. Harold Pfleiderer said in an email that such exams — known as occupation­al health evaluation­s — are done to ensure recruits are able to work as police officers and “safely undertake the physical and psychologi­cal demands of training.”

He said it includes a clinical history, physical exam and testing of any medical conditions and correspond­ing limitation­s and restrictio­ns. The physical exam includes checks on vital signs, head, ears, nose and throat, along with the respirator­y, cardiovasc­ular, gastrointe­stinal and central nervous systems, among other things.

“Rectal examinatio­n as well as breast and gynecologi­cal/Pap test examinatio­ns are not routinely performed as part of the RCMP regular member applicant health assessment,” he said in the email.

The woman said she had erased the incident from her memory and never spoke about it. That changed last week when she saw a news report outlining the police investigat­ion into the matter.

“It was just like a bomb went off and I was like, ’I remember him and what he did to me,’” she said.

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